I hear a lot of good things about Pigments, but it’s a tough sell when Vital does most of the same things for free.
I hear a lot of good things about Pigments, but it’s a tough sell when Vital does most of the same things for free.
Arturia is doing a sale on their software synths. I’m resisting the temptation to add to my collection, but I figure someone here might be interested.
Sounds annoying indeed. I don’t have any firsthand experience with pedals, but I see Strymon Bigsky recommended a lot.
Edit: Oops, forgot you said you already picked something.
Just in case you aren’t already aware, installing the drivers for your audio interface and making sure you’re using ASIO can make a huge difference for latency. With everything set up right, it’s low enough that I don’t notice any difference between listening to synths directly via their headphone jack vs through my DAW.
If you’re planning on running it through a PC, you can get reverb plugins for cheaper than hardware. Valhalla Supermassive is free, for example. Personally, I use Raum a lot - I got it during a promotion where it was also free, but it’s normally $50 and sometimes goes on sale.
I’ve been hit hard by the GAS. I have too many synths already, and I’m always tempted to buy more. It’s an obsession - every single night I’m looking at synths on my iPad in bed. I spend way more time staring at synths I want than actually playing the synths I own.
Yeah, it’s not good.
Part of the problem is every time I realize I’ve gone overboard, thinking about scaling back and selling synths gets me back into over-analytical comparison shopping mode. I’m trying to figure out what’s the best possible combination of just a few synths to keep, and then I think “hey, this new thing could replace 3 of my other synths.” Except in practice, usually the new thing isn’t as great as I thought, and it becomes more difficult to decide what to keep and what to sell. I don’t want to make that mistake again.
Maybe I’ll sell some things later, but for now the important thing is I have everything I need to make the music I want to make. That’s what I should be spending my time and energy on instead of making databases to compare and rank synthesizers. (Yes, I’ve actually done that.)
Deepmind was the first synth I returned to the store for a refund - did not care for that workflow at all. At the time it was a compelling feature set for the price, but there are so many more options now.